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Students are asked to write literary analysis essays because this type of assignment encourages you to
think about how and why a poem, short story, novel, or play was written. To successfully analyze
literature, you’ll need to remember that authors make specific choices for particular reasons. Your essay
should point out the author’s choices and attempt to explain their significance.
Another way to look at a literary analysis is to consider a piece of literature from your own perspective.
Rather than thinking about the author’s intentions, you can develop an argument based on any single
term (or combination of terms) listed below. You’ll just need to use the original text to defend and
explain your argument to the reader.
Allegory - narrative form in which the characters are representative of some larger humanistic trait (i.e.
greed, vanity, or bravery) and attempt to convey some larger lesson or meaning to life. Although allegory
was originally and traditionally character based, modern allegories tend to parallel story and theme.
William Faulkner’s A Rose for Emily- the decline of the Old South
Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde- man’s struggle to contain his inner
primal instincts
District 9- South African Apartheid
Characterization - The choices an author makes to reveal a character’s personality, such as appearance,
actions, dialogue, and motivations.
Look for: Connections, links, and clues between and about characters. Ask yourself what the function
and significance of each character is. Make this determination based upon the character's history, what
the reader is told (and not told), and what other characters say about themselves and others.
Connotation - implied meaning of word. BEWARE! Connotations can change over time.
confidence/ arrogance
mouse/ rat
cautious/ scared
curious/ nosey
frugal/ cheap
Figurative language - the use of words to express meaning beyond the literal meaning of the words
themselves
Metaphor - contrasting to seemingly unalike things to enhance the meaning of a situation or theme
without using like or as
Simile - contrasting to seemingly unalike things to enhance the meaning of a situation or theme using
like or as
What happens to a dream deferred, does it dry up like a raisin in the sun
Hyperbole - exaggeration
America has thrown her hat into the ring, and will be joining forces with the British.
Made famous by the Shakespearian sonnet, closest to the natural rhythm of human speech
Often used in children’s rhymes and to help with memorization, gives poem a hurried feeling
Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house
Often used in classical Greek or Latin text, later revived by the Romantics, then again by the Beatles,
often thought to create a heartbeat or pulse in a poem
The iamb stumbles through my books; trochees rush and tumble; while anapest runs like a hurrying
brook; dactyls are stately and classical.
Imagery - the author’s attempt to create a mental picture (or reference point) in the mind of the reader.
Remember, though the most immediate forms of imagery are visual, strong and effective imagery can be
used to invoke an emotional, sensational (taste, touch, smell etc) or even physical response.
Foreshadowing - When the writer clues the reader in to something that will eventually occur in the story;
it may be explicit (obvious) or implied (disguised).
Suspense - The tension that the author uses to create a feeling of discomfort about the unknown
Rising Action - The process the story follows as it builds to its main conflict
Crisis - A significant turning point in the story that determines how it must end
Narrator - The person telling the story who may or may not be a character in the story.
Second person - Narrator addresses the reader directly as though she is part of the story. (i.e. “You walk
into your bedroom. You see clutter everywhere and…”)
Third Person (Objective) - Narrator is unnamed/unidentified (a detached observer). Does not assume
character's perspective and is not a character in the story. The narrator reports on events and lets the
reader supply the meaning.
Omniscient - All-knowing narrator (multiple perspectives). The narrator knows what each character is
thinking and feeling, not just what they are doing throughout the story. This type of narrator usually
jumps around within the text, following one character for a few pages or chapters, and then switching to
another character for a few pages, chapters, etc. Omniscient narrators also sometimes step out of a
particular character’s mind to evaluate him or her in some meaningful way.
Rhythm - often thought of as a poem’s timing. Rhythm is the juxtaposition of stressed and unstressed
beats in a poem, and is often used to give the reader a lens through which to move through the work.
(See meter and foot)
Setting - the place or location of the action. The setting provides the historical and cultural context for
characters. It often can symbolize the emotional state of characters. Example – In Poe’s The Fall of the
House of Usher, the crumbling old mansion reflects the decaying state of both the family and the
narrator’s mind. We also see this type of emphasis on setting in Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice.
Speaker - the person delivering the poem. Remember, a poem does not have to have a speaker, and the
speaker and the poet are not necessarily one in the same.
Structure (fiction) - The way that the writer arranges the plot of a story.
Look for: Repeated elements in action, gesture, dialogue, description, as well as shifts in direction, focus,
time, place, etc.
Structure (poetry) - The pattern of organization of a poem. For example, a Shakespearean sonnet is a 14-
line poem written in iambic pentameter. Because the sonnet is strictly constrained, it is considered a
closed or fixed form. An open or free form poem has looser form, or perhaps one of the author’s
invention, but it is important to remember that these poems are not necessarily formless.
Symbolism - when an object is meant to be representative of something or an idea greater than the
object itself.
Tone - the implied attitude towards the subject of the poem. Is it hopeful, pessimistic, dreary, worried? A
poet conveys tone by combining all of the elements listed above to create a precise impression on the
reader.
Revision/Grammar
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